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From our March 8, 2001, edition. Foundation hopes to preserve rural life By David Stevens, PanhandleNews.com MEMPHIS
- Jack Martin is worried about the preservation of rural America. The
Memphis man is particularly concerned about the future of small hospitals.
If quality health care is not available, he reasons, small-town residents
will have one more reason to move to the cities. And
so the former schoolteacher has put together a non-profit foundation aimed
at maintaining health care, education, and quality of life in the
southeastern Texas Panhandle, especially Hall and Donley counties. And
he’s enlisted the memory of a rural-American hero to help stir interest. The
Audie L. Murphy Rural Preservation Foundation is hoping to secure its
first funds on March 1, Martin said. That’s when it raffles an Audie
Murphy commemorative rifle with 24-karat gold engraving. Martin said the
limited edition collector’s item is valued at $1,900. Martin,
47, said he has long admired Murphy, who died in an airplane crash in
1971. “Way
back in the early ‘80s I took a group of students to Arlington National
Cemetery, and I saw Audie’s grave,” he said. “I knew who he was, but
that really brought it home.” In
1995, Martin said he tracked down some of Murphy’s relatives and asked
them to participate in promoting patriotism at a school in Gilmer where he
was principal. Martin stayed in contact with family members and gained a
greater respect for the soldier. “I
thought he was an important American that the students needed to know
about,” Martin said. “He was from Texas, he was from rural America
like our school was, and I wanted to tell the students how a person can
achieve great things even if they’re not from a rich family. He grew up
in humble surroundings and became one of our greatest Americans. He
inspired me personally.” Gene
Murphy, 71, of Jacksonville, is a younger brother of Audie. He said the
family worked on farms in the Greenville area in east Texas, raising
cotton and corn among other crops. Gene
Murphy not only allowed Martin to use the family name for the rural
foundation, he agreed to sit on the board of directors. He said his
brother would have endorsed Martin’s project, and he hopes the name will
help inspire success. “I’m
surprised at the number of people I’ve been around, people a lot younger
than me, who remember him,” Gene Murphy said. Audie
Murphy is believed to be the nation’s most decorated combat soldier
during World War II. He received 33 citations for bravery, including the
Congressional Medal of Honor. Many
generations of Americans will remember him for another reason - he became
an actor following his military career, appearing in more than 25 films.
One of his co-stars was Hollywood legend Jimmy Stewart. Martin
hopes Murphy’s name will enable the foundation to help rural causes. “Rural
hospitals are closing ,and we have many needs,” Martin said. “I am a
kidney transplant patient myself, and I’m not the only one out here. I
want to be able to live here in my hometown.”
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Copyright © 2001, The Clarendon Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.